Termite civilization probably has reached its greatest heights in architecture and engineering. Australian mounds, built by workers out of earth particles cemented together by a salivary gland secretion, are steeple-shaped, as much as twenty feet high, and with bases twelve feet in diameter. Hundreds of such structures may be scattered over a few acres. Such an assemblage looks like a large native village, although architecturally the structures are far beyond the abilities of primitive man. The common type consists of a solid, hard outer wall which has the strength of superfine concrete. It is almost impossible to break through this material. Immediately inside are numerous thin-walled passages and galleries. Below these, at the ground level and about in the center, are the quarters of king and queen and the nursery. From the mound, passages for the food foragers lead in all directions through the soil. A mound two feet high will house approximately two million individuals.

Long before architects, termites developed the art of air conditioning. Proper humidity inside the nest is essential to the existence of the soft-bodied workers. The majority of species, however, are found in latitudes with long, dry seasons. To meet such conditions the insects achieved humidity control in various ways still not understood. Notable are the structures of the Australian compass termites who erect dwellings eight to twelve feet high with flattened sides. The broad ends always point east and west, the narrow ends north and south. These nests are strong enough to support the stamping of wild bulls. A group of them looks like a particularly well-constructed native village, or the site of some extinct human civilization. Apparently the precise orientation of the nests is associated with prevailing winds and in some way contributes to maintaining a constant humidity.

The blind creatures seem to have developed special sense organs, unknown to man and probably unique in the animal kingdom. One of these is reportedly a brain barometer which is extremely sensitive to slight humidity changes. Both soldiers and workers respond with military precision to any threat to their neighbors. This believed due to an extreme sensitivity to vibration.

Few varieties of termites can endure sunshine. Some construct paperlike umbrellas which they carry with them when they come above ground. One species on Barro Colorado island in the Panama Canal Zone which attacks live trees first builds a thin earth crust around the trunk, seven to eight feet from the earth. Beneath this crust they seek out weak spots in wood which enable them to penetrate into the heart of the tree.

Termite armies, in distinction from those of ants, serve only as defensive forces. There are two kinds of soldiers. Some are equipped with enormous jaws with which to rend the enemy. These are so tenacious that when the body is torn away from the prey the mandibles remain in place. Others are the bayonet men and chemical warfare troops. These fighters have a protrusion on the front of the head which looks like a long nose but which actually has developed from a primitive eye.

From this protrusion a sticky acid is exuded. In rare instance it may be spurted a short distance—an inch or less. These soldiers fight battles to the death with war-like ants which invade their nests. The termite warrior rams with his nose-like organ the so-called “pedicle” of the ant, the narrowest part of its body, smearing it with the liquid. This never has been completely analyzed. It is a powerful acid, but is not the well-known formic acid exuded by ants. It has strong corrosive properties when applied to metals. It has a pungent odor which, however, is characteristic of all termites and the ancestral cockroaches.

Between ants and termites there is perpetual war. Army ants, especially, try to raid termite nests to feed on the young whenever they can find any crack in the walls through which they can squeeze their bodies. But when there is any break in the nest the termite soldiers immediately arrange themselves in a circle around the opening while workers bring up little slabs of earth from the interior to patch the wall.

Most common of the Barro Colorado species are the amitermes which build hemisphere-shaped red mounds about two feet in diameter. These are made of tiny particles of earth which have passed through the alimentary tracts of the insects where they are coated with a cement-like material. Such a nest is impervious to water. It is so sturdy that a heavy man can jump up and down on it without breaking the roof. It cannot be broken open with a machete.

Another common species build the so-called “niggerhead” nests, about the size of footballs, on fence posts and trees,—especially dead trees whose stumps protrude out of Gatun Lake. These nests also are extremely sturdy. They are made of a mixture of earth grains and finely digested wood. From such a nest numerous runways traverse the trunk, sometimes connecting with smaller colonial “niggerheads.”

Oyster Oddities